
China says “won’t kneel” for American tariffs in a propaganda video
Comparison brings Trump’s tariffs to “drink poison”
Chinese Internet uses sharing tariffs on social media
Reports bringing the risks of weakening China, says Chinese official
Beijing, – China uses its propaganda machine to hit American tariffs, expand videos using Cold War images for Lambaste “Imperialists” and sent a simple message – the surrender is dangerous and we will not return.
Beijing has made little effort to detain his anger on the tariffs reported to be bullying and doing nothing to solve problems such as Fentanyl abuse, and cannot stop the rise of the second largest economy in the world.
On Tuesday, the Chinese Foreign Ministry published a video, accompanied by a voice in English in Americans, on their social media comparing 145% of US President Donald Trump’s “drinking” tariffs.
“China will not kneel because we know that it will stand for themselves, maintaining the possibility of working alive, while compromises will pull it out,” he said, despite the shots of the Chinese fighter MiG-15, who shoots an American beam in the Korean War.
“Imperialists are always arrogant. If they show a little reason, it’s just because they are forced to do so,” he added, this time over the signature of the ceasefire that ended the war.
On Monday, the best Chinese diplomat Wang Yi compared Trump’s business policy to the “open return of the Jungle law” during a meeting of foreign ministers from developing countries in Brazil.
“If we decide to be silent or a compromise, according to the deduction of the Foreign Ministry, it only supported bullying further,” Wang told his counterparts Brics Bloc.
One Chinese official who spoke to Reuters under anonymity said that Beijing’s view was that the yield or compromise would now weaken only China in the future and allow Trump to change the conditions later.
Reports, such as “neteel”, give it to the domestic and international audience, said the person.
On Chinese social media, where censors scrub something sensitive, such as alleged human rights violations, they abound in tariff memes.
“The king came up with new tariffs! Peasants, peasants, listen!” Start the texts to the UP-TEMPO, the electro-beat song on Douyin, the Chinese version of the Tiktoku, referring to the comments of the vice-president JD Vance, who referred to this term “peasants” to the Chinese at the beginning of this month.
“Tariffs for you, even if you are not human!” Song
One picture generated by AI shows Trump, Vance and Tesla Boss Elon Musk assembling sneakers and cheap flip flops in the factory. Next shows a picture of Trump next to the snout of the pig.
Yet not all perspectives of Chinese social media are positive for Beijing.
The Chinese was equivalent to Quora – many answers to the question of the Foreign Ministry’s video was negative.
“Our foreign propaganda department is really bad in terms of abilities. If you don’t know how to do propaganda, then don’t do it,” one user wrote.
This article was generated from an automated news agency without text modifications.
(Tagstotranslate) China